Conversations with a Restless Library

I don’t curate.
I don’t pre-select.
I don’t build productivity playlists.

I just hit shuffle on my entire music library and wait to see what sort of mood it’s in.

Some days, it’s a model colleague — thoughtful, supportive, gently nudging me into creative flow.
Other days, it behaves like a caffeinated record-store assistant with a point to prove.

Take this afternoon.

I sit down to work, and the playlist begins with R.E.M.’s Country Feedback — raw, unfiltered, emotionally scuffed around the edges. It’s a promising start. Then, without transition or apology, it glides into the Australian Chamber Orchestra performing Beethoven’s Violin Concerto in D Major. The Larghetto, no less. And I think, “Richard Tognetti, you magician.” My shoulders drop. My typing slows. I breathe.

But before I get too relaxed, Tina Arena arrives, singing Tu aurais dû me dire, like she’s stepped straight out of a smoky Paris café. She hands the mic to Paul Simon (who simply whispers Love), before making way for a live version of Fleetwood Mac’s Over and Over — all rich harmonies and road-tested soul.

Then, just when I think I know where this is going, Lyle Lovett pulls up a chair.

If I Were the Man You Wanted, he drawls, sounding both mournful and amused, like a cowboy philosopher who’s been stood up at the dance but still has good stories to tell. I smile. He always sneaks in when I need a break from taking things too seriously.

Later, Birdy aches her way through Save Yourself, followed by Peter Gabriel summoning ghosts with Come Talk to Me. Then the cello returns — Yo-Yo Ma and Kathryn Stott, drawing out the aching grace of The Swan.
Madeleine Peyroux offers This Is Heaven To Me, and I almost believe her.
Then Joseph Tawadros bursts in with Rose, oud in hand, like colour returning to a black-and-white film.
Finally, Corelli’s Concerto Grosso brings it all back to centre — poised, measured, quietly defiant.

All that in the time it took me to write this.

My library is a time capsule disguised as a companion — decades of favourites, sorted by artist, era, geography (Australia gets its own wing), and instinct. Classical gets special treatment.

But at home, at work, I hand the reins to shuffle.
It’s unpredictable. It’s deeply personal. It’s mildly chaotic.
But then again, so is Lyle Lovett.

And it works for me.

Daily writing prompt
What do you listen to while you work?


Comments

6 responses to “Conversations with a Restless Library”

  1. You are beautiful 🎶

    This post made me insatiable and yearning for more 🎶

    I strongly urge you to post them weekly if it is feasible for you ❤️

    As I am more of music explorer, spellbound by your refined taste of music, and your selection of songs intrigued me to check out those songs …

    Here you go 🎶
    (Will listen them in my quiet hours to savour the aesthetics of music 🎶 & do correct if I had picked the wrong song 😅for this playlist)

    Liked by 1 person

  2. I love the diverse mix you have. I’m very similar with many different artists and genres on my playlist and I too hit shuffle. Sometimes the songs depend on my mood or what I’m doing, for example, if I’m at the gym, I will want up beat music to move along to. My playlist ranges from Paul Simon to Enya, from Eminem to Neil Diamond.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks. We’ve got similar tastes. The mood doesn’t always match, but it is easy to skip in some instances or delete in others.

      I have a lot of Celtic/Irish in the library, including Enya, Maire Brennan, Mary Black, Clannad, Mícheál Ó Súilleabháin, Van Morrison, Róisín O, The Corrs, & U2.
      (Also, Loreena McKennitt who is not Irish but does fantastic Celtic music).

      Please let me know if there is anything I should listen to.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. That’s a great collection Peter. The Cranberries are a great Irish band or Snow Patrol from Northern Ireland are really good too.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Great suggestions. I forgot them.
        Would you believe we were in Milan in 2009 only to discover that U2 were playing that night. We got tickets from a scalper & discovered that Snow Patrol were the support band.
        It was an amazing night.

        Liked by 1 person

      3. Oh wow I love when things like that happen! Unreal experience I’m sure.

        Liked by 1 person

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